Is Downtown Las Vegas Worth Skipping The Strip?

Is Downtown Las Vegas Worth Skipping The Strip?

"This used to be a 7-Eleven store," says Jennifer Cornthwaite, sitting in Inspire, the 'news cafe' she opened in 2013 in Downtown Las Vegas. "And it was a really nasty one."

Today, customers can browse 200-odd magazines that line the shelves, and even print their own novels on a bookbinding machine as they wait for coffee. But Downtown Vegas hasn’t always been like this. Eight years ago, when she and her husband opened their first bar, this part of Vegas was a no-go area.

Downtown Las Vegas has come a long way, baby. Picture: Getty Images

There was the Fremont Street Experience – a pedestrianised five-block strip of casinos, covered with a neon canopy, which does a cheesy light show on the hour. But if you weren’t in the market for cheap gambling or deep-fried Oreos, it wasn’t the place to be; and, beyond the canopy, it wasn’t very safe.

Downtown Renaissance

Optimists have talked up the resurgence of Downtown for some time, but it was only last year that it became a fully fledged renaissance.

Five years ago, when I lived in Vegas, the Fremont East district – low-rise, 1950s buildings just outside the pedestrian zone – was one small block of bars. Today, it’s around nine square blocks, and is still expanding. Independent shops have opened, historical hotels have been renovated, big-name chefs have arrived, even bigger-name musicians have played here, and the area’s first boutique hotel, Oasis at Gold Spike, opened at the end of October.

After a six-decade break, during which the mega-resorts of the Vegas Strip, three kilometres south, eclipsed it entirely, Downtown is once more a destination in itself. This is where Sin City was founded, after all: the Golden Gate, now part of the Fremont Street Experience, opened as a hotel here in 1906.

Retro Sheen

And whereas Downtown once was old and grubby, it sizzles, now, with a retro sheen. Frank and Dean impersonators perform at the El Cortez, mobster Bugsy Siegel’s old joint. Local politicians power lunch at the old-school Triple George Grill. And the best local steakhouse, Oscar’s, at the renovated Plaza casino, promises 'beef, booze and broads' – local ladies of a certain age, who tell patrons about the history of Downtown.

Not that it’s all locked in the past. Beyond the still-preserved facades of Fremont East’s buildings are spots that wouldn’t be out of place in Brooklyn: a gourmet doughnut shop, a coffeeshop-cum-arts-collective, juice bars, and Nevada’s second independent bookshop, The Writer’s Block, which opened last month.

"Previously, there were a handful of gems here," says Maria Phelan of the Downtown Project, responsible for much of the new investment. "But in 2014, it turned into a place where you can spend all day and all night." She’s right – on my last two visits, I haven’t set foot on the Strip.

Unpack

Eyebrows were raised in 2013 when the Downtown Project bought up the ailing Gold Spike casino, banned smoking, and replaced gaming with actual games – like shuffleboard, darts and Connect Four. Last October, its new hotel wing, Oasis at Gold Spike, proved equally avant-garde. Rooms at Downtown’s first non-gambling hotel – a motel-style block wrapped around a pool – with cool grey walls, walk-in showers, and spinning bathroom towers that double as a mirror and wardrobe.

Sofas and record players feature in the higher category rooms, and bikes are available to all. But bring earplugs – it’s not as well soundproofed as some places.

Think local

Jennifer and Michael Cornthwaite were two of the first to foster Downtown’s burgeoning community with Emergency Arts, which turned an abandoned offshoot of the El Cortez into a coffee shop and arts collective. Their new complex, Inspire, opened in 2013 opposite the Fremont Street Experience.

It is a private members’ club, though non-members are allowed virtually everywhere. The complex houses the news cafe, three bars, and a theatre that often plays host to Strip performers working on personal projects, or special guests – such as the Arctic Monkeys, who played an acoustic set in October.

Eat

He’s a Strip stalwart with restaurants at Palms, Harrah’s and, previously, the Hard Rock; but chef Kerry Simon chose Downtown for his 47-seater Carson Kitchen, which opened last year. Behind the original facade of a 1955 motel, its communal seating and veg-heavy menu is a far cry from typical Vegas fare.

And Simon’s not the only one transferring to Downtown; next door is a doughnut shop run by a former Caesars Palace pastry chef, while Bradley Manchester, who revolutionised the Vegas buffet at the Cosmopolitan, has opened Glutton, a block away.

Food is a sure bet now that the likes of chef Kerry Simon has moved Downtown. Picture: Getty

Drink

Renovation, rather than implosion, is the modus operandi here, and the latest historical venue to get a facelift from the Downtown Project team is the Bunkhouse Saloon.

A dive bar since 1953, it relaunched in September as a live music venue, bar and restaurant, with a large patio outside. Beer gardens, in fact, are what sets Downtown apart from the Strip, where most bars languish in the casino gloaming; one of the prettiest is at Park on Fremont, a quirky 2013 opening with a fairy-lit terrace at the back.

Spend

Miracle Mile, Grand Canal Shoppes, the Forum Shops … for decades, Vegas suffered the tyranny of shopping malls. In winter 2013, Downtown responded with the Container Park, which is now fully occupied. In these stacked shipping containers, housing independent shops around a central green (where Sheryl Crow played a surprise gig last year), you’ll find everything from locally made watches and jewellery to gourmet jerky and children’s toys.

Don't miss

Las Vegas isn’t quite the cultural vacuum it’s made out to be, but the city doesn’t help itself with its gleeful destruction of anything approaching the historical. Fortunately, Downtown has escaped much of the wrecking ball – including some of Sin City’s iconic neon signs.

There's no lack of neon on the Strip but check out signs of times past at the Neon Museum. Picture: Getty

Fremont Street has several (from a flashing martini glass to a spinning red stiletto), but the bulk are at the Neon Museum, just north of Downtown. It is an outdoor collection of 150 signs from long-gone motels to Caesars Palace and the Sahara – reborn in September as the SLS Las Vegas hotel.

This article was written by Julia Buckley from The Independent and was legally licensed through the NewsCred publisher network.

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